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Peer-reviewed

Advances in understanding large‐scale responses of the water cycle to climate change

Richard P. Allan, Mathew Barlow, Michael P. Byrne, Annalisa Cherchi, Hervé Douville, Hayley J. Fowler, Thian Yew Gan, Angeline G. Pendergrass, Daniel Rosenfeld, Abigail L. S. Swann, Laura J. Wilcox, Olga Zolina

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences · 2020

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Summary

Globally, thermodynamics explains an increase in atmospheric water vapor with warming of around 7%/°C near to the surface. In contrast, global precipitation and evaporation are constrained by the Earth's energy balance to increase at ∼2-3%/°C. However, this rate of increase is suppressed by rapid atmospheric adjustments in response to greenhouse gases and absorbing aerosols that directly alter the atmospheric energy budget. Rapid adjustments to forcings, cooling effects from scattering aerosol, and observational uncertainty can explain why observed global precipitation responses are currently difficult to detect but are expected to emerge and accelerate as warming increases and aerosol forcing diminishes. Precipitation increases with warming are expected to be smaller over land than ocean

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1111/nyas.14337
Catalogue ID
SNmokeh7f2-o36wqd
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